Marta’s hidden needle and Harlan’s final Go game
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Joni visits Harlan in his attic office, where Marta is preparing a hypodermic needle. Joni says goodnight to Harlan and leaves.
Lieutenant Elliot recounts Harlan's explanation: he and Marta were playing Go and knocked the board over, and then Marta went to bed. The spilled Go board is visible.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A mix of resolve and dread; she is committed to her course but acutely aware of the risk.
Marta’s back is turned to Harlan and Joni, her body language rigid with concentration as she prepares the hypodermic needle. The act is swift and concealed, her posture twisted to shield it from view. The needle gleams faintly in the dim light, a silent threat poised for injection. Her tension is palpable—this is not a routine medical preparation but something far more loaded, foreshadowing the fatal overdose. The spilled Go board lies ignored at her feet, a metaphor for the chaos her actions will unleash.
- • Complete the preparation of the needle without detection.
- • Protect her undocumented mother’s future, even at Harlan’s expense.
- • Harlan’s death is the only way to secure her family’s safety.
- • Her honesty (and physical reaction to lies) makes this deception a necessary evil.
Feigned nonchalance masking deep unease; his control is slipping, but he refuses to show it.
Harlan answers the door to Joni, his posture relaxed but his voice carrying the weight of authority. He explains the spilled Go board incident with a dismissive wave, his calm demeanor a deliberate mask for the tension simmering in the room. His interaction with Joni is brief—her kiss on his cheek is met with a perfunctory nod before he shuts the door, sealing Marta’s hidden actions behind it. His focus remains on the Go board, a ritual now disrupted, symbolizing the unraveling of his carefully controlled world.
- • Maintain the illusion of control over the situation (and Marta’s actions).
- • Dismiss Joni quickly to avoid further scrutiny of the attic’s tension.
- • Marta’s loyalty is unshakable (though her actions suggest otherwise).
- • The Go board ritual is a symbol of order—its disruption is a personal affront.
Detached professionalism with a hint of dry amusement at the family’s cluelessness.
Lieutenant Elliott’s voiceover retrospectively frames this moment, his narration acting as a lens through which the audience recognizes the scene’s significance. He recounts Harlan and Marta’s interaction, the spilled Go board, and Joni’s brief visit, all while highlighting the needle’s implication as a clue in the investigation. His tone is methodical, underscoring the contrast between the family’s obliviousness and the hidden danger in the attic. The voiceover serves as a narrative device to draw attention to details the characters miss.
- • Guide the audience to recognize the needle as a critical clue.
- • Establish the attic as a site of hidden tension within the larger investigation.
- • The Thrombey family’s secrets are the key to solving Harlan’s death.
- • Marta’s actions are suspicious and warrant closer scrutiny.
Warm but distracted; her focus is on maintaining her relationship with Harlan, not on the attic’s undercurrents.
Joni knocks on the door, her presence a brief interruption in the attic’s tension. She kisses Harlan on the cheek—a gesture of affection that feels performative, her obliviousness to Marta’s hidden actions stark. Her interaction is fleeting; Harlan dismisses her with a curt ‘go to bed,’ and she complies without question. The door shuts behind her, leaving the attic’s secrets undisturbed. Her role here is that of an unwitting bystander, her bohemian charm a foil for the darker currents in the room.
- • Reaffirm her connection to Harlan (and by extension, his financial support).
- • Avoid conflict or scrutiny by leaving quickly.
- • Harlan’s favor is essential to her business and Meg’s future.
- • The Thrombey family’s dynamics are too complex to question—better to stay out of it.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The hypodermic needle is the silent center of this event, its preparation a fleeting but loaded action. Marta twists her body to conceal it from Harlan and Joni, her posture rigid with tension. The needle gleams faintly in the dim light, a physical manifestation of the fatal overdose to come. Its presence is a stark contrast to the Go board’s spilled stones—where the board symbolizes disrupted routine, the needle represents the irreversible act that will shatter the Thrombey family’s world. Lieutenant Elliott’s voiceover later elevates its significance, framing it as a critical clue in the investigation.
The door to Harlan’s attic office serves as a threshold between secrecy and normalcy. Joni knocks, and Harlan answers, but the door’s brief opening reveals only a sliver of the attic’s tension—Marta’s back turned, the needle in her hands. The door shuts quickly, sealing the secret within. Its role is dual: it protects Marta’s actions from prying eyes (like Joni’s) while also symbolizing the family’s willful ignorance. The attic, once a private sanctuary, becomes a site of hidden premeditation, and the door is the barrier that keeps the truth contained—at least for now.
The Go board lies overturned on the floor, its black and white stones scattered—a visual metaphor for the disrupted ritual between Harlan and Marta. Harlan mentions it dismissively to Joni, but its presence is heavy with symbolism: the game represents their nightly bond, now fractured by Marta’s secretive actions. The spilled stones foreshadow the chaos Marta’s overdose will unleash, while Harlan’s insistence that ‘they play it every night’ underscores his attachment to routine and control. The board’s disruption is a microcosm of the larger unraveling to come.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Harlan’s attic office is a private sanctuary turned into a site of hidden tension. The dim lighting and cluttered space amplify the secrecy of Marta’s actions, while the spilled Go board on the floor symbolizes the disruption of their nightly ritual. The room’s atmosphere is thick with unspoken conflict—Harlan’s calm demeanor masks his unease, Marta’s rigid posture betrays her desperation, and Joni’s brief intrusion feels like an unwelcome disruption. The attic is both a refuge and a pressure cooker, where the family’s secrets fester and the needle’s preparation takes place in plain sight, yet unseen.
The third-floor landing serves as a threshold between the public and private spheres of the Thrombey mansion. Joni pauses here before knocking on Harlan’s attic office door, the space marking a clear divide between the family’s public gatherings and Harlan’s concealed world. The landing is narrow and shadowed, heightening the tension of the moment. It is a liminal space where secrets are kept just out of sight—Marta’s needle preparation happens mere feet away, yet Joni remains oblivious. The landing’s role is to emphasize the family’s compartmentalized lives and the ease with which truths can be hidden in plain sight.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"LIEUTENANT ELLIOTT: Harlan was in his attic office with Marta. He explained that they had just knocked the GO board over—that game with the grid and stones, they play it every night, and he was fine, go to bed. So she does."